Node static page server for quickly getting MVVM running
Find a file
Misha Wolfson 051c5b4433 Fix stream parsing bug
In lodash 3.10, .forEach does not get called in a chain unless .value() is passed, but in lodash 4, it does.
2016-12-15 18:01:23 -05:00
lib Fix stream parsing bug 2016-12-15 18:01:23 -05:00
test Fix minor spacing issues 2016-12-15 18:01:23 -05:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2015-02-02 06:35:00 +00:00
.jshintrc many: Initial 0.1.0 version. 2015-02-02 09:52:31 +00:00
bin.js Make bin.js executable 2016-12-15 18:01:23 -05:00
LICENSE many: Initial 0.1.0 version. 2015-02-02 09:52:31 +00:00
package.json Fix stream parsing bug 2016-12-15 18:01:23 -05:00
README.md Update README.md 2015-04-23 11:16:00 +00:00

spserver

spserver (or single page server) is a simple helper utlity for creating/running a server for using in pure single-page applications in true MVVM fashion without having to write any node code or using nginx or anything. This can be helpful to jump start making any single-page applications and get it running in seconds.

How it works

spserver has two modes of serving files (minimum either has to be specified):

  • Single file
  • Static folder

When specifying a single file, all url requests will resolve with the contents of said file. This is handy for MVVM applications where the front-end javascript handles all url path routing.

When specifying a static folder, it will first look up the url request on the static folder to see if the file exists. If it doesn't, it falls back to the single file (above) or 404 (if single file was not specified).

A combination of these two will allow you to create a single base.html that will bootstrap your MVVM application with the static folder containing the javascript files. For an example, see the nfp_www project.

API

spserver(settings)

  • Settings for the server (see config below)

CLI

How to use

npm install [-g] spserver
spserver -f ./myfile.html -s ./public -p 3000

Options

spserver --help

By default, spserver will use the settings located in config.json. You can also override them or run it directly using only the commands below.

--config, -c Location of the config file for the server [default: config.json]

--port, -p The port server should bind to [default: 3001 or 80 in production mode]

--file, -f Single static file the server should serve on all unknown requests

--bunyan, -b Use bunyan instead of console to log to [default: true in production mode]

--template, -t Parse the static file as lodash template with all options/settings being passed to it

--name, -n The name for this server for logging [default: spserver]

--serve, -s Folder path to serve static files from [default: public]

--prod, -P Force run the server in production mode

--debug, -d Force run the server in development mode

Config

The config file (default config.json) provides means to configure spserver in greater detail as well as provide optional settings to pass into our template (see template below).

A sample config.json file:

{
  "production": {
    "port": 80,
    "bunyan": {
      "name": "myserver",
      "use_bunyan": true,
      "streams": [{
        "file": "/var/log/server.log",
        "level": "info"
      }]
    }
  },
  "development": {
    "port": 5000,
    "use_bunyan": false
  }
}

Any of the settings in the config.json file can be overridden using the CLI options above.

Template

spserver can also help provide any additional info to your single file thanks to lodash.template. If template mode is specified, it will parse the single file first through lodash.template with the whole config file. This can allow you to specify configuration in your config file and expose them in your single file.

Example:

config.json

{
  "api": "http://api.mysite.com"
}

base.html

<!doctype html>
<body>
  <script>
    var apiUrl = "<%- api %>"
  </script>
  <script src="/js/lib/mithril.js"></script>
  <script src="/js/main.js"></script>
</body

Then you can run it like this: spserver -c ./config.json -t -f ./base.html -s ./public